. .;..:,.::' ::\1 ?( T;); ::tfit"ulf' <.:. n ;'Ylí I:;::.. ...' .," .. ".:, ;0:';:- diu ......:<<{. _-" '\ :;:t ;. . . n: ..;;... ' ' " .V ,. $iÄ . : :\::.\,l&;:<&.,' ...: &:t-? - " " >/ ' l n [ lLh l 1 E ,J':ri and , ''3 day Caribbean M-,;' sãiìing aaventures from $650. ", ";;-;:".... :,:j. ,;;l'ldr móre information call your ' i:,i.fravél agent or fl:/ ÆOO-327-2601. . ,i\ f' , ,'z2Ii:;:,i::':''';. ' 'kJ ? . \ ""';':>:: i,,', \r ' :.,; .' . <:,: , U,,' '''i::;r<' '"u",,,,,,, ,:,,, >",:",' .': .;, ' ; 1 '/}! "ts ,:r \, f http:lwww.winclj mmer.c1 j:':::PO Box 190120, Dept. 38, i miuBeach, ::"Ir i; 9 , CIl(;} is cover Chez Clarisse's fine ".. .". home products from Provence, including ceramics, tiles, fabrics, bathware and many more. Please call (800) 965-9130 to receive our beautifully illustrated free catalog. .'. r1rl/lid The Bllccaneer St. Crob.. LT.S. \ir in Islands Golf: tennis, exquisite beaches and more. .. all on a tropical 340 acre estate. Experience the charm of the Caribbean the way it 'used to be at this historic property, operated by the same family since 1947. http://'I.f..,'''li.,''W.thebuccaneer.com ,.. See your Travel Professional or call 800-25;)-388] THE POKE BOAT IT'S EVERYfHING A J;f;f.. CANOE ISN'T. It weighs only 22 -, 606- pounds. You can 986- buy more than 2336 a canoe. -"' !I l:;.:-t" '- -.- ,,-- - Vacation Rentals .,..::,';;" '! .}l ;.._ -- France Ita Iv S p ain ::' ,, _ ' :"j1!' I I' I . .,à -#" , ,7 . f Portugal & The U K ' .,:_ ., ::õ," ' .... · · :J; '.:" ' ,.. . ::- We have a wonderful selection qI pèJ"Sonally inspected Country Homes, Villas and Apartments, Rentals available from a week to a year. Call Vacances Provençales Vacations, 1-snO-263-7152, FAX (416)322-0706. lk'U'll'.ir!foramp,nef/-vpv to Joni Mitchell. In short, my sister's take on music was largely integrationist and feminist. For her, soul was not limited by race, even though it grew out of black music. Rather, what she focussed on was the singer's voice, and the blues-based guitar or stride piano supporting it. And the way she identified each of those singers as "black" taught me a new defini- tion of the word-one that had little to do with skin color. One of the reasons my sister and I could call certain white singers black was that they identified themselves as such in their music-in their tone and cadence and subject matter. Last year, around the time the songwriter Rickie Lee Jones's gorgeous album "Ghostyhead" came out, I told Jones that she had been one of those singers. Her face took on a look of apprehension and curiosity; but she didn't explain how my confession had affected her until we began discussing Laura Nyro. "I graduated from grade school during the riots in Chicago," Jones told me. "I was the subject of terrible racial brutality, and never for a moment did I consider a Black Panther my brother. When Nyro sang that line, 'Black Panther is your brother,' it mended it, and all the people she spoke about were bonded to me." Recently Howie Klein, who records J oni Mitchell on his label, Reprise Rec- ords, told me that Mitchell had always felt that her music belonged on black radio. (The first line of Mitchell's pro- posed autobiography reads, "I was the only black man at the p ") Where Beck uses black music to feed his sense of hipness and adolescent rebel- lion, Mitchell, Nyro, Jones, and others recognize in it their own identification as emotionally and politically disenfran- chlsed people. T HE title song of Aretha Franklin's latest album, "A Rose Is Still a Rose," was written by the twenty-three- year-old black rapper-songwriter Lauryn Hill and is full of the kind of spiritual up- lift that Hill publicized as a third of the enormously popular trio the Fugees. Hill released her first solo album, "The Mised- ucation of Lauryn Hill," last August, and it has already gone double platinum. Where Franklin was hailed as the Qreen of Soul, Hill has been anointed the new Qreen of Hip-Hop. Newsweek and Time have run stories about her, and Entertainment Weekly put her on its cover. Like Franklin, Hill is a child of 235 . .... - .. ..."' ...: ; ," ," I '. ::> I ; J Ir- ;{ ) ;= ; : ::::::! . .... ".'/ I =g ;:;.: ,::",, /;;1,' ,, -:,,"' .;g:::: 1 / --..- :::::::::,'" þ' -:':: -- ';::::...... ::--:.: : ".: ; =-:íi;;' ' . ,'- - ; -:,- "- .......--:-- /' -- ARTURO FUENTE. JUAN CLEMENTE. ON OCCASION, A PRECASTRO CUBAN. ALL WRAPPED UP IN THE FINEST HOTEL IN DENVER. A hotel should be more than a place to lay your head. It should be a refuge in which you can truly relax, be comfortable, enjoy a fine cigar or snifter of cognac. And, more than any hotel in Denver, The Brown Palace is just such a place. 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